On Sunday 21 October 2007 9:54 am, John ORourke wrote:
> Here's a different take on Apache2::Filter::Minifier. I run a small web
> dev shop, I code perl and manage the servers, and I have a small team of
> web developers who make works of art using JS and CSS. I have a few
> hundred man-hours* pe
I generate my Javascript on the fly, it can be different on every
request.
I find this very useful...
-bop
On Oct 21, 2007, at 11:26 PM, Andrew Wyllie wrote:
Maybe I wasn't really very clear. I don't think 'minifing' your JS/
CSS
every time it's requested is very useful. You should eithe
Maybe I wasn't really very clear. I don't think 'minifing' your JS/CSS
every time it's requested is very useful. You should either preprocess it
and then install it on the webserver (in which case you would not need a
mod_perl module) OR you could use a mod_perl module that minifies the JS/CSS
Apologies for the self-follow-up.
On 10/21/07, Bart Schaefer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I'm porting an Apache 1.3/mod_perl application to Apache2/mod_perl2.
> "make test" fails with
>
> Can't locate object method "request" via package "Apache2::RequestUtil" at ...
I discovered that I'd missed a
I'm porting an Apache 1.3/mod_perl application to Apache2/mod_perl2.
I've got everything working in that Apache2::porting doesn't complain
and the application behaves as expected if I force an install, but
"make test" fails with
Can't locate object method "request" via package "Apache2::RequestUti
The uploaded file
Apache2-Filter-TagAware-0.01.tar.gz
has entered CPAN as
file: $CPAN/authors/id/A/AP/APRIME/Apache2-Filter-TagAware-0.01.tar.gz
size: 9124 bytes
md5: dbf01588e4030b70d449654fb98deed8
Nearly a year after this thread:
http://marc.info/?l=apache-modperl&m=11633081710
Hi folks,
Is it possible to get apache to log which modules are being called at
request stage?
If it is possible that should pinpoint my problem - if it's not
possible, read on...
I appear to have a subrequest being generated in some cases between my
fixup handler and response handler. My
If you'll pardon the devil's advocate bit...
Caching isn't really the issue - you can use mod_cache, or make your own
using CSS::Minifier. I think Bjorn was questioning the
Apache2::Filter::Minifier:: approach.
Here's a different take on Apache2::Filter::Minifier. I run a small web
dev sho
I agree, this looks like it would be best suited to a standalone script.
If you really want this to be a mod_perl module, why don't you do something
like check the timestamp of the JS/CSS file and cache (Cache::FileCache) the
minified version of the file until the timestamp on the original fil
On Oct 16, 2007, at 1:24 AM, Graham TerMarsch wrote:
After receiving some feedback from people about my Apache2 auto-
minification
filters for JS/CSS, and seeing that the only issue people seemed to
have was
that the underlying minifiers weren't terribly fast, I've gone
ahead and have
rebu
On Oct 17, 2007, at 2:40 PM, Mark Maunder wrote:
So I'm sticking with prefork. Also, my requests average around 2937
B/request which means they're serviced very quickly even for slow
clients, so I think I can get away without implementing a proxy
accelerator for now, but something I'll keep ree
[EMAIL PROTECTED] bugzilla-3]# rpm -qa|grep mod_perl
mod_perl-devel-1.99_16-4
mod_perl-1.99_16-4
Looks like you have a old version installed, it might help to remove
that rpm if you are installing 2.0.3 from source.
[EMAIL PROTECTED] bugzilla-3]#
[EMAIL PROTECTED] bugzilla-3]# cp /root/per
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